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  2. The Best Men’s Hats for A Cool Summer, From Classic Baseball ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/best-men-hats-cool...

    From Troy Kotsur's Oscar acceptance cap to cool snapback styles, we've rounded up over 15 hats you'll want to wear through fall.

  3. Whoopee cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whoopee_cap

    George Lindsey as Goober Pyle wearing a typical whoopee cap.. A whoopee cap is a style of headwear popular among youths in the mid-20th century in the United States. It was often made from a man's felt fedora hat with the brim trimmed with a scalloped cut and turned up.

  4. List of hat styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hat_styles

    It is made from long songket cloth folded and tied in particular style (solek). Top hat: Also known as a beaver hat, a magician's hat, or, in the case of the tallest examples, a stovepipe (or pipestove) hat. A tall, flat-crowned, cylindrical hat worn by men in the 19th and early 20th centuries, now worn only with morning dress or evening dress.

  5. Boater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boater

    A sea of boaters in New York's Times Square, July 1921. Being made of straw, the boater was and is generally regarded as a warm-weather hat. In the days when all men in Western Europe and the US wore hats when out of doors, "Straw Hat Day", the day when men switched from wearing their winter hats to their summer hats, was seen as a sign of the beginning of summer.

  6. Adam Hats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Hats

    Adam Hats manufactured and sold a variety of budget-priced hats, including the traditional fedora, and pork pie hat. In late spring of each year, Adam Hats promoted straw hats for the summer. Two of their models were The Executive and The Major; the last being "The hat of the month for September", and cost $3.25.

  7. Fedora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fedora

    Hasidic Jews wore black hats, albeit not fedoras, and in the later half of the 20th century, non-Hasidic (Lithuanian style) yeshiva students began to wear black fedoras (or dark blue or gray). Today, many yeshiva students and Orthodox men wear black fedoras for prayer and many even while walking outside.

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